PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Turning off major memory switch dulls memories

2013-12-11
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Toni Baker
tbaker@gru.edu
706-721-4421
Medical College of Georgia at Georgia Regents University
Turning off major memory switch dulls memories

Augusta, Ga. – A faultily formed memory sounds like hitting random notes on a keyboard while a proper one sounds more like a song, scientists say.

When they turned off a major switch for learning and memory, brain cells communicated, but the relationship was superficial, said Dr. Joe Tsien, neuroscientist at the Medical College of Georgia at Georgia Regents University and Co-Director of the GRU Brain & Behavior Discovery Institute.

"We have begun to crack the neural code, which allows us to look in real time at how thoughts happen and how memories are made," Tsien said. "That has enabled us to understand for the first time how and whether the right keys are struck at the right time and in the right place and manner to make the beautiful sound of coherent memories and to compare what happens when a key element is missing."

With the NMDA receptor intact, chatter reverberates, associations are made and helpful memories – like how touching a hot stove results in a burn – are easily retrieved.

"You see a face and think of a name, you see your office, and you think you need to work; everything is associative," said Tsien, corresponding author of the study in the journal PLOS ONE. "But in mice lacking an NMDA receptor, you can tell the memory patterns are dull and dissociated."

Using the century-old Pavlovian conditioning model that first showed how repetition creates association, they found that mice lacking a functioning NMDA receptor in the hippocampus, the brain's center of learning and memory, could not recollect even something fearful.

When they played a tone, followed 20 seconds later by a mild foot shock, normal mice quickly made the association, down to the timing. The connection essentially never registered with mice lacking the NMDA receptor.

"They form the initial patterns, but don't rehearse them," said Tsien. "Their tones are flat, the association is poor, while everything we register in the healthy brain is associative." To illustrate just how flat, Postdoctoral Fellow Hui Kuang assigned musical notes to the memory activity of each, which resulted in random noise by the NMDA knockout mice compared to a dynamic rhythm from normal mice. (Hear the recordings at http://mcgsites.org/grunews/files/2013/12/Amnesic-brain-recalling-contextual-memories.mp3 and http://mcgsites.org/grunews/files/2013/12/Healthy-brain-recalling-memories.mp3.)

"By knowing what these patterns look like and what they mean, you can use this signature to measure, for example, during aging, why we begin to lose memory and to identify and test drugs that are truly effective at aiding memory," Tsien said.

"You can tell whether there is an issue with reverberation, whether your brain is repeating what you need to remember, or repeats it but somehow stores it badly, so it's not associated with the right things. This study has revealed a lot of fascinating details about what neuroscientists call the brain's neural code" Tsien said."

He wants to look at how aging affects these processes as a next step. The research team also is looking at Doogie, a mouse genetically bred by Tsien and his team in 1999 to be exceptionally smart, to see if they can also learn more about how super memories are made and what they look like.

This ability to decode how and what the brain is remembering, should one day help physicians better assess and treat conditions such as Alzheimer's and schizophrenia, Tsien said. They may find that some answers are already out there, such as drugs that boost reverberation, or a stimulant like caffeine to help retrieve a memory, Tsien said.

His team first reported decoding brain cell conversations as memories were formed and recalled in PLOS ONE in 2009. As with the new study, they used a computational algorithm to translate the neuronal conversations into some of the first pictures of what memories look like.



INFORMATION:



Tsien is a Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar in Cognitive and Systems Neurobiology.

Toni Baker
Communications Director
Medical College of Georgia
Georgia Regents University
706-721-4421 Office
706-825-6473 Cell
tbaker@gru.edu



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New study highlights key role soil structure plays in water uptake by crops

2013-12-11
New study highlights key role soil structure plays in water uptake by crops The increased global consumption of food means that there is an increasing yield gap between crop production and crop usage. To help tackle this issue, a team of scientists from ...

Motivating healthy adults to be more physically active improves their cardiorespiratory fitness

2013-12-11
Motivating healthy adults to be more physically active improves their cardiorespiratory fitness COLUMBIA, Mo. – Fewer than half of adults in the United States meet the recommended physical activity guidelines set by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. ...

Holiday shopping for friends? Why looking for unique gifts might not be the best plan

2013-12-11
Holiday shopping for friends? Why looking for unique gifts might not be the best plan Finding the perfect gift for that special someone is never easy and the challenge gets even harder during the holiday season. According to a new study in the Journal ...

Resisting temptation: Why reading your horoscope on diet days might be a bad idea

2013-12-11
Resisting temptation: Why reading your horoscope on diet days might be a bad idea Most major newspapers publish daily horoscopes, and for good reason—even when we deny being superstitious, human nature drives us to believe in our own fate. According ...

Mars and Venus go shopping: Does gender play a role in negative word of mouth advertising?

2013-12-11
Mars and Venus go shopping: Does gender play a role in negative word of mouth advertising? When do you complain about a faulty product or a bad shopping experience? Do you tell your friends or does a total stranger hear the brunt of your rant? According ...

Colleges pay attention: How do top 10 rankings influence applications?

2013-12-11
Colleges pay attention: How do top 10 rankings influence applications? Ranked lists are everywhere. If you want to pick out a college, restaurant, hotel, or doctor, chances are there's a Top 10 list that can tell you which ones are the best. According ...

Motivating women to forget the message: When do breast cancer ads backfire?

2013-12-11
Motivating women to forget the message: When do breast cancer ads backfire? After a traumatic experience, the details we remember surrounding the event are sometimes foggy. According to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research, consumers remember ...

Natural disaster relief: How does psychological distance affect donations?

2013-12-11
Natural disaster relief: How does psychological distance affect donations? When natural disasters occur, news reports can tug on our hearts and influence how we react to relief efforts. According to a new study published in the Journal of Consumer Research, ...

Scientists identify more powerful approach to analyze melanoma's genetic causes

2013-12-11
Scientists identify more powerful approach to analyze melanoma's genetic causes (Lebanon, NH, 12/9/13)—There may be a better way to analyze the genetic causes of cutaneous melanoma (CM) according to a study published in Human Genetics conducted ...

Missing molecule in chemical production line discovered

2013-12-11
Missing molecule in chemical production line discovered Salk scientists have uncovered a missing step in how cells make a class of compounds that include commercially important drugs and flavor molecules LA JOLLA, CA-- It takes dozens of chemical reactions for a cell to make ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

International research team awarded €10 million ERC Synergy Grant to revolutionize drug delivery

Research Spotlight: State-of-the-art 7 Tesla MRI reveals how the human brain anticipates and regulates the body’s needs

Rice and Houston Methodist researchers to study brain-implant interface with Dunn Foundation award

OU biochemists lead global hunt for new antibiotics

October research news from the Ecological Society of America

Kinase atlas uncovers hidden layers of cell signaling regulation

Texas Tech scientists develop novel acceleration technique for crop creation

Worcester Polytechnic Institute to lead $5.2 million state-funded effort to build Central Massachusetts BioHub

China commands 47% of remote sensing research, while U.S. produces just 9%, NYU Tandon study reveals

Grocery store records reveal London food deserts

Hotter than your average spa bath: Extreme warming of Amazon lakes in 2023

Genetic variants fine-tune grain dormancy and crop resilience in barley

Cosmic dust record reveals Arctic ice varied with atmospheric warming, not ocean heat

Mechanical shear forces can trigger gas bubble formation in magmas

Space dust reveals Arctic ice conditions before satellite imaging

MIT physicists observe key evidence of unconventional superconductivity in magic-angle graphene

In the US, Western rivers may be allies in the fight against climate change

The enzyme that doesn’t act like one

Shopping data reveals ‘food desert’ hotspots in London, suggesting where nutritional needs are not be being met

West Coast mammal-eating killer whales are two distinct communities that rarely mix

Highly efficient and compact

A 3D atlas of brain connections

Evolving antibiotic resistance under pressure

Inflammation may be responsible for driving earliest stages of lung cancer

Why your daily walk might not work as well if you’re on metformin

ERC Synergy Grant advances understanding of the blood–nerve interface to improve pain management

New climate dataset warns both rich and poorest nations will see sharp drop in crop yields

Breakthrough could connect quantum computers at 200X the distance

Young adults with elevated cholesterol often go untreated, study finds

More women sought permanent contraception after Supreme Court Dobbs decision

[Press-News.org] Turning off major memory switch dulls memories